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REPEAT:MNI:Ex-BOJ Hayakawa: BOJ Should Change Policy Framework

Repeats Story Initially Transmitted at 05:41 GMT Nov 15/00:41 EST Nov 15
--Hayakawa: BOJ Should Aim To Achieve 2% CPI In Longer Term
--Hayakawa: BOJ Should Cut JGB, ETF Purchases
     TOKYO (MNI) - A former senior Bank of Japan official said Wednesday that
the BOJ should adjust its monetary policy framework, as Japan's modest economic
recovery could run out of gas before the 2% price stability target is achieved.
     "The BOJ's 2% price target will not be achieved in the near future and I'm
concerned about the risk that Japan's economy will fall into recession before
the target is achieved," Hideo Hayakawa, former BOJ chief economist and
currently senior executive fellow at Fujitsu Research Institute, told reporters.
     He added that if the economy fell into recession before the BOJ could push
up inflation to a stable 2% from under 1% now, the BOJ would run out of
effective monetary easing tools.
     "The BOJ should change its 2% target to a medium- to long-term price target
and reduce the scale of its purchases of Japanese government bonds" and
exchange-traded funds, Hayakawa said.
     Hayakawa was one of six executive directors at the BOJ supporting the
governor from March 2009 to March 2013 after serving as the chief economist for
the central bank.
     Data released Wednesday showed that Japan's economy expanded for the
seventh straight quarter in July-September, the longest sustained growth period
in 16 years, but that consumption lacks strength and global demand remains
uncertain.
     In September, Japan's economy seemed to have surpassed the second-longest
postwar expansion period that lasted for 57 months, from November 1965 to July
1970.
     If the economy continues to grow until January 2019 before the next sales
tax hike planned in October that year, it would exceed the longest post-war
expansion period that stretched for 73 months from February 2002 to February
2008.
     But Hayakawa said the current economic recovery is unlikely to last that
long.
     Japan's economy is likely to grow more than 1% this and next fiscal years,
but the annual inflation rate, measured by the year-on-year rise in the core
consumer price index (excluding fresh food), will not rise to 2% in the
foreseeable future, Hayakawa said.
     "Private economists forecast the rise in consumer prices to peak at 0.7% to
0.8% in September or October. I think consumer prices will rise a little more
but I don't think they will even stabilize around 1%," he said.
     The current BOJ estimate is to achieve the 2% price target sometime in
fiscal 2019, but economists on average forecast a rise of just 0.7% in core CPI
for that year.
     In September, the core CPI rose 0.7% on year but the core-core CPI
excluding fresh food and energy gained only 0.2%, indicating the recent slow
increase in inflation owes much to year-on-year rises in fuel prices and utility
costs.
     "The focus is on whether the underlying trend of consumer prices
strengthens this year and the important point is how wage hikes for non-regular
workers will affect service prices," he said.
     Hayakawa also voiced concern over the outlook for private consumption,
which will be hit by the recent rise in the cost of living amid slow wage hikes.
     "A drop in real wages to be caused by higher consumer prices will dampen
consumer spending," he said.
     Total monthly average cash earnings per regular employee in Japan rose 0.9%
on year in September, posting the second straight year-on-year rise, but
continued to mark a slight drop from a year before after being adjusted for
inflation.
     Hayakawa added that social security premium payments by households are
rising and set to rise further given the falling working population, which will
reduce purchasing power and weigh on consumer spending.
     He repeated his argument that in unwinding its large-scale monetary
stimulus, the BOJ should target the yields of shorter maturities, instead of
raising its target for the 10-year Japanese government bond yield from the
current target of around zero percent.
     The BOJ won't be able to raise the interest rate target for the 10-year
JGB, the benchmark for borrowing costs for businesses and households, because
the year-on-year rise in the CPI is unlikely to steadily rise past 1% toward the
bank's target of 2%, he said.
     Previously, Hayakawa thought the BOJ would raise its 10-year yield target
when inflation rose above 1%.
     At the start of its aggressive easing in April 2013, the BOJ leadership
vowed to hit the 2% inflation target in about two years with massive asset
purchases. Inflation reached 1.5% in April 2014, excluding the direct impact of
the sales tax hike that month, but the plunge in crude oil prices in the summer
pushed the BOJ's effort to reflate the economy back to square one.
     The stubborn deflationary mindset among households and businesses and slow
wage hikes have stymied progress in lifting prices and inflation expectations.
The BOJ board has delayed the timeframe for achieving the 2% price target for
the sixth time, now aiming to reach the goal in fiscal 2019, four years later
than initially planned.
--MNI Tokyo Bureau; tel: +81 90-2175-0040; email: hiroshi.inoue@marketnews.com
--MNI Tokyo Bureau; tel: +81 90-4670-5309; email: max.sato@marketnews.com
--MNI Beijing Bureau; +86 (10) 8532-5998; email: vince.morkri@marketnews.com

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